Frost v. Rich

200 N.W. 561, 199 Iowa 421
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedNovember 19, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 200 N.W. 561 (Frost v. Rich) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Frost v. Rich, 200 N.W. 561, 199 Iowa 421 (iowa 1924).

Opinion

Stevens, J. —

This is an action for the rescission of a contract for the exchange of certain securities for real property in the city of Des Moines, known as the Ayrshire Apartments, and f°r cancellation of a deed executed in purguanee of such contract. The record, which is unnecessarily voluminous, is incumbered with much incompetent and irrelevant testimony, and it is with some misgivings that we attempt to make a clear and accurate recital of the facts. It appears, however, without dispute in the evidence, that appellees were the joint owners of the Ayrshire Apartments, located in the city of Des Moines; that appellant E. H. Rich was the owner of second mortgages upon an 880-acre tract of land near Clear Lake, in Cerro Gordo County, Iowa, aggregating $102,600, and of other securities. The second mortgages were executed by Harry and Ticia Brooks, to whom the land was conveyed by appellants on December 16, 1920. The *423 first mortgages upon different portions of the 880-acre tract aggregated $57,400. In addition to the above incumbrances, drainage taxes were laid upon the land in the sum of $28,500. Appellees having offered the Ayrshire Apartments for sale, negotiations between them and Rich for the exchange thereof for the securities referred to began in the spring of 1921, and culminated in the execution of a written contract to that effect on June 15, 1921.

The Ayrshire Apartments were valued in the contract at $212,500, and were conveyed to Rich subject to an incumbrance of $72,500. The contract recited that the value placed upon the property was for the purpose of the trade. The evidence showed that the apartments were built in 1919 at a cost, including the lots, of approximately $160,000. Rich agreed to assign the second mortgages upon the Cerro Gordo County farm, aggregating $102,600, together with a mortgage of $8,000 on other land in Cerro Gordo. County, subject to a first mortgage of $6,000, a mortgage of $9,000 on a quarter section in Howard County, subject to a mortgage of $17,000, ’ also a mortgage, of $11,000 on 1,817 acres of land in Cherry County, Nebraska, subject to a mortgage of $9,000, and to convey certain other land to appellees in Cerro Gordo County, subject to first mortgages of $10,700, and to assign a contract of sale held by him for said land, on which there was a balance due of $9,300. Other provisions of the contract need not be stated. The papers were finally exchanged on or about October 10, 1921.

Relief is sought by appellees upon the ground of fraud in the original transaction. The fraud charged in the petition is that appellant B. H. Rich represented to them that the consideration for the sale of the 880-acre tract to Brooks was $194,800, or approximately $221 per acre; that he paid in cash, or its equivalent, $34,800; and that this sum represented his net accumulations available for the purchase of the farm during the thirteen years he had occupied and cultivated it as a tenant. The testimony covers a wide range, and much of it has little, if any, bearing upon the issues to be decided. Largely, fact questions only are involved.

The real matter for decision is: Was there any such misrepresentation of the facts bearing upon the value of the se *424 curities traded to appellees as to justify a decree canceling the deed and the rescission of the contract of June 15, 1920 ? This is. the primary question to be determined, and not the value of the land upon which the securities were liens. There is much conflict in the evidence, and great difficulty has been encountered in arriving at a satisfactory conclusion of the facts. It is urged on behalf of appellants that the marked depreciation in property values is responsible for the controversy, and that no misrepresentations of any kind were made, to induce appellees to enter into the contract.

Harry Brooks and his family resided upon the Cerro Gordo County land for thirteen years, under an agreement with Rich & Rogers, a copartnership, or E. H. Rich, appellant, for an equal division of the proceeds derived from the farming oper-. ations, which included, in addition to the growing of crops, the purchase, feeding, and sale of cattle and hogs in large numbers. This arrangement AA'as terminated March 1, 1920, Avhen a division was made of the personal property upon 'the premises. The extent of the personal property Avhich was divided between them is not very conclusively shown. One witness testified that he appraised the property, and that the share of Rich & Rogers was $18,720.01, and that all of this property was sold to Brooks. Rich also testified to the division and the sale of his interest in the property to Brooks. Just how the consideration for this sale was paid is not shown. It is clear, however, that Brooks paid no part of it in cash. The custom of dealing between Rich and Brooks naturally suggests that chattel mortgages were executed to secure the purchase price. Brooks also testified to the presence on the farm at that time of a large quantity of stock and farm implements. Brooks, hoAvever, is largely discredited as a witness by his testimony upon a prior occasion in a proceeding against him, auxiliary to execution. In that proceeding he testified that there was a very small quantity of stock on the premises in March, 1920.

Rich, R. R. Rogers, his bookkeeper, and Brooks and wife, all testified that the consideration paid by the latter for the 880-acre tract was $194,800; that the sale was consummated at the office of appellant in Clear Lake, December 16, 1920, when a contract setting forth in detail the terms of the sale, and a *425 deed from appellants, conveying the property to Mrs. Brooks, ivere executed and left in the care of Rogers. It appears from the testimony of Rich and Harry and Ticia Brooks that negotiations for the purchase of the farm were- begun in 1919, and continued from time to time until the papers Avere executed. Mortgages upon different tracts of the farm, aggregating $57,400, had previously been executed. Three second mortgages, divided among the tracts referred to, aggregating $102,600, Avere executed by Harry and Ticia Brooks to Rich on the above date. These are the mortgages in controversy. It is conceded by appellants that no part of the consideration Avas paid in cash. The manner in Avhich it is claimed the $34,000 was paid is, however, shown by the evidence. More than $17,000 of it consisted of a credit upon the books of account betAveen Rich and Brooks; $8,800 of it was in due bills previously issued by Rich to Brooks in payment of alleged commissions on the sale of land; and the balance, of $8,508.73, was secured by a note of Harry and Ticia Brooks’, due in five years. The larger part of the $17,000 item was also made up of notes signed by Brooks, one of which was an accommodation note of $5,000. Rich' at all times denied that he at any time represented to appellees that the alleged $34,000 payment was made in cash or its equivalent, but, on the contrary, testified that he stated to them that it was in part paid by credit upon a book account, and that he offered to produce the account. We shall not review the testimony at length upon this point. We are convinced that the representations were made substantially as charged.

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200 N.W. 561, 199 Iowa 421, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frost-v-rich-iowa-1924.